Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1948 — Page 11
k Albert League v. T (UP)— caches in the erence were
‘rankie Albert co’ Forty-Nin-thing in pro
haven't been tL it's a cinch ynamo who ~ Rose Bowl ars ago is the spected player
s passing or my Phelan of 1s. “The little ich experience jat play will defensive - set-
juarterback in d Carl Voyles
dgers. onal value to co . ball club too highly,” d) Strader of ges.
oo Gentle, to Lytell [N, Trinidad, Lytell, Negro nder of Fresound decision , light _heavyf the British ay night. )aniel from a in the ninth was helpless
ytell weighed
to Pitch
on Coast
Nov. 1 (UP)— age will start 1 the Oakland
1 the Kansas.
n a baseball ht. out for the Bearden, ace w voted’ the rookie of the ¢ Bob Lemon Pacific Coast
3 0
PORT,
8591
1:00 P. M.
e——
ors Linked Baugh Leads
Notre Dame Mentor Sees American
Athletics as Key
to Success
By FRANK LEAHY, Cosch, Notre Dame University
aa Joothall?
Lo
in no small part responsible for our country’s success when nonmilitary men assumed the tremendous responsibilities in a military life. Upon our return to Notre Dame in the spring of 1046, we were met by a group of men intent upon assuming -their former civilian status, and limiting their competitive desires to the football field. It then became obvious th us that a football team was a car-| bon copy of democracy, where eleven men subordinated their individual desires to the betterment of the whole. Source of Pride It was a source of great pride to know that men such as Bob] Livingstone, Bob McBride, Gerry Cowhig’' and Jim Martin, who had achieved individual acclaim on the varied battle fronts, still were willing to return to Notre Dame and accept arduous tasks so that their school would take its place in the national football picture. We mention these lads because
{lad « with average
termined effort, develop into a star performer, so can this same intelligence greatness in his chosen
little more effort than ‘the average person.
Redskins to 59-21 Win
‘Hits Fast Pace in
the Boston Yanks, 59 to 21, at Griffith Stadium. In all, the 34-year-old veteran T-formation master pitched for 446 yards in 17 completions to break’ Luck:
, |man’s mark of 433.
Meanwhile, the high-flying Philadelphia Eagles remained a game ahead of the Redskins after defeating the Pittsburgh Steelers, 34 to 7, at Pittsburgh. » Tommy Thompson and Steve Van Buren, as usual, furnished| the bulk of the Eagle scoring power. Thompson completed 16
The law of compensation evi-{P dences itself on the football field as a preliminary to the application of the same principle in later life. A top-flight surgeon or lawyer will call into play the same qualities necessary for athletic distinction.
The willingness' to pay the price is necessary in both in-
|stancés.
Our Saturday's contest with the Midshipmen from the Naval Academy gives food for thought in our consideration of the value of sports. At no time during the 60 minutes of that game did the Middies show any sign that they were (willing to capitulate. Even though the Irish were playing their best game of the season, and costly Navy fumbles contributed to our success, still the opposition fought on and eventually scored in the fourth quarter. Even in defeat, those lads that continued to ¢ viciously earned the respect of the 64,000
of our knowledge of their ex-
Max Schmeling ‘Retires’ at 43
BERLIN, Nov. 1 (UP) ~~ Ancient Max Schmeling, former world heavyweight champion, announced his “final” retirement from the ring today after he had suffered a thorough beating by Richard Vogt of Hamburg before 20,000 chilled fans in an outdoor arena. Schmeling, 43, not only lost the decision, but he lost every one of the 10 rounds of his first postwar bout in Berlin. Only his gameness kept him afoot in the
last round when Vogt had him|thon,”
slaggering and slipping about on wet canvas. et ga, weather, accompanied by a drizzle, made the fans almost as uncomfort: as the out-classed ex-champion. who held the world title from 1930 to 1932, and who knocked out Joe Louis in 1936,
Palmer Is Favorite ™ In North-South Open PINEHURST,
N. C, Nov. 1 (UP)-——Johnny Palmer of Badin, N. C, one of the nation’s six leading money winners this year, headed a list of 110 entries today for the 46th annual North and South Open golf championship tournament opening tomorrow on the rugged .6952-yard, par: 72 Pinehurst Country Club course. Palmer was rated a favorite over a field including Sammy/| Snead, former British open cham-| pion, and Frank Stranahan, holder of the Mexican, British and Canadian amateur crowns, as well as Jim Turnesa of Elmsford, N. Y., defending 1047 champion. ‘About 50 players were to_qualify round.
Football Results
2 OLLECES Bants Clara 25, San Prancisco 13. yten 7, Xavier (0) 0. Loras 28° Bt. Ambrose 6. Fortier 26, Jesuit
Steubenville, 7. pajem ow. ar tie). a Bo Wiss Teachers 13, Eau Claire Southwestern. (Kas) 0, Northwestern LS achier 39, River Falls Teach-
ers s U, a 28, Luther . , Pens (fa) 13,
art ns Eureka 26, heipia- 8 Valley Suey A ) Teschers 34, Eilenale Bottinent Forestry 20, Dickinson (N. D.) Gogebic (Mich.) 45, Bethel (St. Paul) 17. 8t. Louis 0
Bt. Bonaventure 2i, , Milligan 19, Carson Newman 7, Lane 0.
Louisville Munici Kentucky 33,
y.) Buftslo 48, Louisville 19. Louisiana Tech 24, Sout
Catawba 21, Presbyterian 6. Noord 13, New! 0. High Point 35, Guilford 27. Allen 14, Bethune-Cookman 0. Appalachian 34, Emory and Henry 13. e 26, Tusculum' 7. na 33, Arizona uate rem 1h 3. Hardin: simmons 27, Tex: an e). Sul Ross 33, Bi go WY Corpus Chri a3, jel Bak Southern I aoa Th “rerss as, Colege 3. tate
Western
, Montana State Nore). Paci yy Lutheran 33, Western ‘Washing-
20, New
. SPORT SHIRTS
a colors, sor TE $2, ] HARRY LEVINSON
Corner Illinois & Market. 37 N. Penn,
King Jewelry Co. Expert Watch & Jewelry Repairing 3-DAY SERVICE Free Estimates Reasonable Prices
in tomorrow's | S
College of Idaho 40, British Columbia 6. Fresno (Cal) Baie Mexico|
‘onlookers.
|Gzech Marathen
Won by Swede
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Nov. 1 (UP)—Sweden's Goesta Leanderson, running in a cold rain, beat a big international field of marathoners to win the 10,000 meter cross-country race yesterday in 34 minutes, 22.4 seconds. -Beveral hundred spectators in Stromovka Park saw the 30-year-old Swede duplicate his last Thursday's performance in the “Czechoslovakia Freedom Mara- ,”. a 42-kilometer run at ices Leanderson took the lead at the start and never lost it. At the 3000 meters he led his nearest challengers by 30 meters and steadily widened the gap to finish far ahead. Second was V. Diringer of Czechoslovakia in 34:32; third, Henning Larsen, Denmark, 34:45; fourth, Alphonse Schmidt, Switzerland, 35:50; fifth, A. Uttel, Czechoslovakia, 36:04; sixth, John l, Norway, 36:16.
Armory Wrestling Card Features’ Team Bout Australian tag-teamers will comprise the feature, bout on to-
morrow night's wrestling card at the Armory.
in 22 attempts while Van Buren romped for 109 yards along the ground in 22. tries. : Chicago Bears Win The Chicago Bears and Chicago Cards kept apace in the battle for first place in the Western half of the league.’ The Bears powered their way past the New York Giants, 35 to 14, while the Cards had a rough time overcoming Los Angeles, 27 to 22. Young Jim Hardy of the Rams, subbing. for Bob Waterfield, had a field day in vain, completing 28 passes for 408 yards. The Detroit Lions finally won their first game of the season by edging the’ once-mighty Green Bay Packers, 24 to 20. It was the first Lion victory over a western division league opponent since 1945 when the Packers again were the victims. Pete Layden of the New York football Yankees, who couldnt hit American League baseball pitching last season, exhibited ample proof that he can pass, plunge and panic the opposition in the All America grid conference. Wife Undergoes Surgery Layden batted only .250 with the St, Louis Browns last season but ‘he batted .833 with the grid Yankees yesterday as he set up five of the six touchdowns that Swampsd the Chicago Rockets, Playing brilliantly despite the fact that his wife was undergoing a major operation at a nearby New York hospital, LaySan passed for three touchdowns an pped off long gains to set the stage for two others. He gained a total of 332 yards, surpassing team-mate Spec’ Sanders’ former record of 322 yards set last year. Buffalo's belligerent Bills climbed into a first place tie with Baltimore in the Eastern Division by beating the ‘Colts, 35 to 17. Burly Chet Mutryn of the Bills put on a one-man show in the second half as he sparked Buffalo’s winning drive. He scored
the Bills added another insurance tally on George Ratterman’s long forward pass. . Ben Agajanian, the .toeless ’|place-kicker, and Glenn Dobbs, who played only three minutes, combined to give the Los Angeles Dons a 17 to 0 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers.
[USED TIRES |
two of Buffalo’s touchdowns and}
MIGHTY MITE—T scalped] quarterbacks the TE The Township's ber, cm
boasted a member of its team lacked none of ‘the gray matter. oid string quarte
the Franklin Township game, the
us do not.
Teddy's older brether last year
was an All-County halfback for
Pike, a six-foot-one-inch 185 pounder. Teddy's a sophomore and is 15 years old, but he’s just a little nick off the old block. He weighs 82% pounds and stands four feet, ten inches tall. Played Four Minutes He played four minutes in the first game for Pike, but Quarterback Ed Schmidt has been a virtual 48-minute man ever since. But Teddy got in the Franklin game ten days ago and smothered himself with prestige. He made three tackles in one minute of play as a line backer. Little Teddy's helmet is too large | for him. Hi His $ hands are too
rback, who can lay claim to being one of the smallest line-backers wih varsity prep experience in the state. Potter weighs cnly 82 pounds and is four feet, 10 inches tall,
tackles in oss minute while backing up We line.
Little Pike's Little Teddy ° Shows He's Rough, Ready
Theodore Potter isn’t the best line-backer in the sta‘e. Not even pound-for-pound. But the kid has the courage that most of
He's the second-string quarterback on little Pike Tgwnship’s| football team. He was until Friday. Next year he hopes to take over the signal-calling department and he could handle that, too.
the brawn and team this year that fell shart of the beef but He is tiny Theodore Potter, sec-
In midget quarterback made. three
small to grip a football firmly. His feet propel like a flywheel and the tiny Pike quarterback does everything possible for a tiny mite to do. And he does it well. “He's as.tough as any man I've got,” asserts Coach Clifford Reese. “He'll try tackling with anyone and he's a fine little student.” Teddy's popularity with his mates can’t be denied because the kid asks no quarter, Size means little to the modest ball-toter. But it could mean a lot to the opposition next season.
Once-Beaten - Wildcats Head
{league chase and was the obvious
For Bowi Bid
Ineligible Michigan
Looms as Big 9 Champ
CHICAGO, ‘Nov. 1 (UP) — Barring upsets of Michigan and orthwestern, there was nothing left to play for in the Big Nine |tootball race today. The mighty Wolverines, boasting a string of 20 straight triumhps, have é¢linched their secs ond consecutive conference crown unless Indiana or Ohio State pulls upset of the season and beats them in their two remaining conference
Michigan this season, was in unsecond place in the
choice for the Rose Bowl berth, the post-season plum which usual- | would go to the champion, Wolverines Ineligible Michigan went to the Rose Bowl last year, however, and lunder terms of the Big NinePacific Coast bowl pact, no Westlern Conference team can participate more than once in three years. Thus the Wolverines were eliminated and logically the faculty representatives, who must |} vote to pick the league date, could choose only the secondplace team. That looked like Northwestern, which will be a heavy favorite to trip Wisconsin Saturday and a slightly less topheavy choice to down Illinois in the final game of the season. Indiana hardly looked like a club which could upset Michigan. The Hoosiers have dropped two league games, to Ohio State and Minnesota, and two nonconfer-
orthwestern, loser only to|
In most instances it was the
Benchdusters Supply & d Surprises Over Week-End
Wildcat, Georgia Tech, lowa Subs Spark. Their Tc~As; Stan Heath Posts Passing Mark
NEW . YORK, Nov. 1-If you have a winner it follows you must have a matching loser, so there was plenty of Monday -nourn ing today as a result of a hash Saturday in which college football ‘came up with just about everything in the book. accredited
teams-—the all-America candidates—who were the standouts. But.in a number of cases the
honors went to unheralded subs drafted off the bench as records! went. tumbling. Impromptu fisticuffs relieved the tedium of touchdowns and one team even went 80 far as to pass for the extra
ing Irish of Notre Dame mauled oft-scuttled Navy, 41 to 7. It erased a mark of his famed pred-
Leahy’s teams of 1946-'48 made it their 234. During both of these legendary eras, the Rockne and y teams were tied once. hree substitutes, Johnny Miller of Northwestern, Jimmy Jordan of Georgia Tech and Don Fryauf of Iowa, played movie roles in sparking their ‘teams to victory. Miller, summoned - from his splinter gathering, practically ran Northwestern into the Rose Bowl with two touchdown romps which bested Ohio State, 21 to 7. The 135-pound Jordan ghosted 34 yards to set up the winning touchdown in undefeated Tech's 19-7 triumph over Duke. And
bench to score the first touch-|f
it was Fryauf who came off theX
Towa the will for a comeback 19-13 win over Wisconsin. Aside from them you had your usual hot shots! Stan Heath of Nevada, break-
point, ing the national collegiate passing For suave Frank Leahy it was|record for yards gained in one a personal triumph as his Fight-|5¢ason,
touchdowns, one on a 68-yard run, passing for a third and
ing clipped Texas, 21 to 6. Jensen, blond bomber, scoring both touchdowns as the Bears took a lien . on the Rose Bowl with a 13-7 iconquest of batting Charley (Choo Choo) Justice heaved both touchdown'passes as unbeaten North Carolina ‘whipped Tennessee, 14-7,
Jackie
set jointly by TCU's = Davey O'Brien and Bud Schwenk of Washington U, of St. Louis, = as Nevada flattened Oklahoma
scessor, Knute Rockne, whose|City, 79 to 13. 1918-21 teams compiled 22 vic- *__ Walker Sparks SMU tories without defeat. Doak Walker, two-
points as SMU California's
Southern Cal.
Amateur Basketball
State amateur and in inde, ball a dependent basket-
Afternoon are sked to or the Tear
anapolis
games. Beah quintet - entered yy the Mi : oun onday gam lish hve.
down and set up the third to give
Hours:
Texas Christian. lost two games, to Northweste and on an off-day to Iowa,
Teddy fits like a glove on a quarterback sneak and handoffs through the line.
the Buckeyes might be able give Michigan a game and possibly win,
lence scraps, to Pittsburgh and || Ohio State has
rn and! to|ff hard-fought I
Monday and Friday:
A COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE| For the Entire Family
EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES FITTED For Those Who Need Them
Side Turneta
Indian: ankiin-3074, between 2
ALL SIZES Fully Guaranteed
GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE
627 N. DELAWARE Riley 1436
Irish Mike McGee, Cedar Rapids, Towa, and Martino Angelo, Toledo, will fight Frankie Hart, Chicago, and Joe Wolf, Columbus. In the special supporting bout, Joe Christie, s |Brandfot, Ontario, Canada, will wrestle Jimmy James, Houston, Tex. This bout is for one fall or 30-minute time limit. The [feature attraction is two out of three falls with a 90-minute time limit.
Moscow Names "| Weight Lifting Champs LONDON, Nov, 1 (UP)—The Moscow Radio yesterday announced the names of USSR weight-lifting champions who, the broadcast said, were crowned after “tens of thousands” of athletes had competed. The broadcast listed the following champions: featherweight Konvalov of Moscow, lightweight Solomakha of the Ukraine, middlewight Lavrantyev of Lenin-
3 of Moscow.
ars FULLY
Use Shur.
grad, and Heavyweight Bolshakov| a,
» . Al Stoops
Florist Switches to Calvert for its Finer Bouquet and Flavor in
ST.-LOUIS, MO—Al , St. Louis florist, of 4309 Margaretta, has switched to Calvert Reserve because he prefers its milder, lighter flavor. “No wonder most of my friends have switched, too!” he says.
CALVERT RESERVE Blended Whiskey —86.8 Proof—85% Grain Neutral Spirits. ert Distillers Corp., New York City
. . ALSO good esrcssses thet have been RECAPPED and GUARANTEED sgainst defects in material snd workmanship. THESE ARE VALUES! TERMS!
B. F. GOODRICH
NORTH & DELAWARE STREETS
- BEDBUGS FLEAS, ANTS, MOTHS, ETC.
RAT-MICE KILLER
ARNOTT EXTERMINATING CO:
249 MASSACHUSETTS AVL
$ a0
’
USED TIRES
hundred and fifty
follow in 1950 and
UILDING on a firm foundation is the rule by which your Electric company has grown. Such an essential service to modern living as Electricity can only be provided by an institution that has strength and stability. The traditional dependability of Power & Light was built into the sub-structure of its new White River generating station. Ground was broken on March 15, 1947, and the foundation excavation required - the removal of 205,000 cubic yards of earth. Six
Steel and reinforced concrete provide a firm foundation and sub-structure upon ‘which the new White River plant of Indionopolis Power & Light Company is being erected, 18 miles southwest of the city. The above phote was taken in September, 1947. At right is an architect's drawing of the new plant, showing how it will look upon completion.
tons of steel were used to
reinforce the 9,000 cubic yards of concreté poured for the sub-structure. The first generating unit of 40,000 kilowatts capacity is scheduled for service early in 1949; another unit of equal size will
a third in 1951. These new
units will provide the additional Electricity to give Indianapolis the power to grow.
INDIANAPOLIS
Poser oe ight comonn:
(Rua 15. a5 Nw ES ne
Hin ar Jona
sod
$50,000,000
In a Series REPORTING
THE EXPANSION
ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT
In the Future
of the Indianapolis Area
Expansion plans of Indianapolis Power & Light
Company call for the investment of $5
0,000,000 in
new facilities in the five years ending with 1951 to meet the increasing need for Electric service. These plans include the new White River generating plant, a connecting high-tension transmission line to Indianapolis, and improvement and extension
of existing plants and system.
COMPANY
