Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1949 — Page 36
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St. Joan of Arc CYO Grid Team Rides High
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music. Hi ed popularity recently a Cathedral when the
of _cheff likes to. race. Two +“ Aontinentals have a lot of “hop”
veral Are ‘Jive’ Experts JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS
ve passes all day.
time."
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pm, Bailey 8 pm,
Howe vs. W 8 pm, Shortridge
grabbed a
finish in 21:35.
ers’ Hobbies Bach to Bugology
» ‘Models Fascinate Continenfar Se
you ever heard
pm. Crispus Attucks (Open). ashington at CYO,!
of a football-playing pianist who mixes * « ng formulas with bis denothing else
backfieldmen are 'mechanically-motivated. Scatback A Frank Mascari, who's a main cog in the Redskins’ model-T-forma-tion, has a model T of his own he tinkers with. Fullback Bob Adams has mechanical inclinagirls” | tions. End Vincent Guiliani gets on his bicycle after chasing!
usual hobbies. Manual’'s Don Kissell is a mathematician. Broad Ripple's Bill Crouse likes dogs and teammate Dick Turmail, who wants to be a radio announcer, lists speaking as his favorite pas-
Cathedral's Don Barton may get his quarterbacking aptitudes| from his academic interest in the reading habit. A Manual fresh-| man, Bob Davis, likes to shot put as a hobby. Sacred Heart's Joe Mappas likes passing handbills. | Shortridge's Bob Montgomery, a chemistry enthusiast, is Inters| ested in the birds and the bees. Beech QGrove's ‘Eber Skiff likes trapping. As a halfback he should football {namely, of the mouse variety,
other City, County H. S. Grid Schedule This Week
Tomorrow
field;
Franklin, Ind, at Ben Davis,
at Manual, 8 p. m. Tech at Marion, 8 p.m.
Butler Harriers Run iThird to Miomi U.
KALAMAZOO, Mich, Oct. 29 (UP)~Miami University of Ohio
try victory from Western Michigan and Butler University today. Miami led with 24 points followed by Western with 47 and Butler with 61. Western Michigan's Russell Gabier was first to
minutes old when the fast-step-ping Negro back knifed around the right end and scampered down the right sideline unmolested for a. 46-yard touchdown. That scoring play capped Wisconsin’s opening drive after the first kickoff, originating on the Wisconsin 31.
and Wisconsin touched off its touchdown detonators for the second time from its own 26. Fullback Lisle Blackbourn and Halfback Gwynn Christensen
eight yards out to score.
for his third and final score.
n-ipass, then handed off to Teague A coming around toward the rightjall-round work of Tackle Ernie end. Teague swept all the way, Kovatch who sat out the game |p L&f then Blackbourn converted the because of a shoulder injury. second of his three points after
touchdown.
for 11
lation
studded Hoosiers played like vet
standing one-man show for In
a first down.
4
1
EM-RO
Both teams exchanged punts
powered down to the Indiana 20 and Petruska rifled a short stab to ‘Teague down the middle, Teague bouncing off Nick Sebek
In the second period, the Bad- intercepted Sebek’s throw on the ger forward wall continued cut-(Badger 45 and Teague, Blackting a deep swath through the{bourn and Christensen drove to Hoosier's front line defenses andthe 11-yard line where Blackthe indefatigable Teague, romped bcurn kicked a field goal for the
He ran across on a briliantlyexecuted fake pass handoff by|21 to 13 in first downs and ran up Petruska on the IU 43. Petruska,| |faking to one man, also faked a Indiana.
Wisconsin had run up 11 first defeats. downs to Indiana's four in the] first half, and Sebek, Indiana's aerial crackshot, had hit only 2
But after the dressing room the sophomore- Quarterbacks {vieh.
erans most of the way to the
Indiana's End Cliff Anderson, whose six pass completions tied| ron the conference mark for one ©O'Dona game, turned in the game's out-|
diana, He recovered Bob Robertson's fumble on the Indiana 34 after the Hoosier back clicked off
Anderson Caught Deflected Pass low. Robertson danced down the mond Schecter Radoiite oie Ham: Hight sidelines for a first down Speedw at Beech Grove, 8/and Anderson got another Sebek ay we gr to the Wisconsin 34. It was Pans then that Sebek threw a long one down the middle to Ander-|d
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touched. The Badgers had scored on a similar play against Marquette for their season's first TD. IU Scored in Fourth Indiana showed ‘courage by coming back in the fourth quarter to score again. The harddriving Robertson fired up his mates with his bull-shouldered running down to the Wisconsin 26 after a Badger punt. He made it to the six in two more tries and Jerry Van Ooyen got a first down to the one. Jim Gomory lost one but Robertson, hurt a moment before, bounced around the right end to score. Henkle place-kicked the conversion. Late in the period, Bill Lane
final tallies.
connected with a 37-yard
(Continued From .Page 33) a basketball star, made a juggling one hand catch of a Savic pass, and was downed on the 44. Krall pass to Hague, and then hurtled off left
Ohio State gained 228 yards rushing, against 120 for Northwestern and made 16 first downs to the Wildcats’ nine, OHIO STATE mT nds—Armstrong, Schnittker, PalFi one mpeg gue
ters LinInEeE, Mecullousth Held. Right Fe rastwein.” Wilson: -
wa ight Ends—-Hague, Watson. Quarterbacks Wertz, Savie, ood. padre Haltbacks—Newell, Krall, Swine.
Right Halfbecks — Widdoes, Hamilton, Stark: Levay. ac backs—Clark, Morrison, Perini}. Gan-
NORTHWESTERN Left Ends—Stonesifer, Zuravieff,
The Badgers outscored Indiana 364 yards rushing to only 54 for
The Hoosiers sorely missed the
Indiana rested on the floor of ithe Big Nine standings with three
, INDIANA Left Ends—Anderson, Tallon. Jett Tackles—Georgakis, Talerice. t Guards—W, Bartkiewicz, W. Smith. Center—Dolan. Right Guards—Wituck!l, Thomas, Brooks. Risht Tackles—J. Bartkiewics, Rawl ight Ends—Craton, Luft, Winston. —Sebek, Benner, Kasono-
par Halfbacks—Robertson, Tutsie, Marshall, | Right Halfbacks—~Gomory, Davis. Ibacks—Van Ooyen, Bowman, Henkle. WISCONSIN Na «~ Haberman, Halverson. ue, : Left Tackles—Bennett, Elliott. Left Guards—Yderstad, Price, Staiger. «| Center—Kelly. Right Guards—Knauff, Gable. Right Tackles — Huxhold,
Smith. Right Ends Wilson, Quarterbacks—Petruska,
"Otterback. Meyers. ty
Fulibacks—Blackbourn, Evans, Lane. Scere by Periods
Wisconsin... Touchdowns-—Teague 3. Rober
erson, | downs—Blackbo
+ raises uit 3a Finis Jent likes . Tuesday son. Wisconsin's James Ham-|Geal Blackbourn. = = . a . mon efle a cago. Umxi PE nd s are widely scattered,| Warren Central at Broad RIp-|tour.yara Tred the ! gy Be Hoan. Mb ed Ph oaoie "too, among cultural and tech-ple, 8 p.m. nabbed it and ran across. Don Herbert Steger. Michian. a lines. - For example, Wednesday Henkle converted. {First downs i... “there're the hot-jive boys. Wash| Southport at Decatur Central, Minutes later it was Indiana's Net Jord: Paaing «iii: Ww 8 ‘ington’s Bill Kern can tickle a8 pm. turn to slip into its defensive lapse forwards attempted ... i 1 hs and play a trombone. At- Thursday at the left flank. End Hal Haber-! ® : * Sucks’ Nelson Alvarez, an end, Beech Grove at Lawrence Cen- man speared two tosses in a row ys RL EE al a lean toot a trumpet. tral, 8 p.m. iand Wisconsin drove to Indiana’s ; Sid . Crawford Plays Plano Friday 24 and Teague went to the nine.| 4 i Cathedral at Broad Ripple, 8 On the fourth play, Back James'Y%9s, Denallzed oe »
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Withers, oat. . 4 oft" Halibacks—Teague. Embach, siren. BOTONS Regain Lead i CLEVELAND, Oct, 29 (UP)~ Flashing their most potent scorthe ‘Cleveland Barons romped to an Embach, An-|938Y 9 to 3 American Hockey | League victory tonight over the
00 7 T-14 $718
tson. Points After Toych, urn 3, Henkle 32. eld
Thomas. Toft Tackles—Sawle, Ford, Panters. Left Guards—Nowicki, Parsegian, tel,
Centers—Wietecha, Price, Petter. Right Guards—F. Day, MacRae, Ander-
{son Right
X H $ H: - jackie Tor the score, Hague con Miss. State, 54-6
8 3
yards for the final Tennessee score and Carolina finally counted against the Vol subs, driving 85 yards.
Tulane Crushes
NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 20 (UP) —Tulane University’s ponderous football team ripped avenues in Mississippi State’s outweighed defense today and its fast backs sped to a 54 to 6 victory. Obviously, Coach Henry Frnka of Tulane could pretty well have
in the middle of the second pe-
power,
runs. al The shock of Tulane’s debacle two weeks ago at the hands of Notre Dame had worn off and Tulane performed again like a Boutheastern Confer-|
potential ence Champion.
aslo conoch, Forman. | Right Ends—Keddi Baggot Stee. { ‘ Burson, Flowers.
e, 8! i: backs—yJ. Miller, Alban, Meeder.
._Day. Right Halfbacks—Tunnicliff, Worthing. | ne ulibacks—Perricons, Murakowski, Sund-
Score by Perioas vara fes 0 ror Shdowns—Morrisen 2. Krall, MuraPoints ‘After Touchdown—H , Nemain PI Goal Hae, Hague 3, Ne ee—Russell H. oii iy asic elf, OF . _Plel ge—J. M, 4 | Viator. Linesman—Joha R. McPhee. Ober: {lin,
{ Ohio ' North.
‘Ohio State .
Northwestern i i =
| Net [Por
{Number of punts .. ..... |XAve, distance of punts {Pumbles x WF {Ball lost on fumbles ... umber of penalties ...... ards Denhlized day ae | XProm line of serimmage.
log punch of the season,
The
| in the first period.
bay Western it 1
| Buffalo Bisons before 8214 fans {and regained first place in the Linesman | western division. Ind. wise. | Scored three 1 1
Barons goals before the
bight TT ee
FOOTBALL
Sun., Oct. 30, 2P. M.
LAST CHANCE 10 BUY SEASON TICKETS, OMY $2.50
SEASON TICKET $2.50-STRL AVARABLE
saw the game.
Colorado Beats Utah
In Snowstorm, 14-7 BOULDER, Colo., Oct. 20 (UP)
{game that
|ence mates
“llowa Explode Rally to. Edge
Oregon Ducks, * Hawkeyes Get Going af Last After West Coasters Take Lead of 24-6
named his own score. But he started using sophomore reserves
riod, to reduce Tulane’s scoring
Even 80, two Tulane backs ripped off 65-yard touchdown
An estimated 35,000 spectators
—In a Nhard-socking football was finished in a banon ¥al-|driving snowstorm, Colorado University subdued their old conferfrom Utah University, 14 to 7, today in an inter-
: ROBERT C. (BOB) 0b : : Damn heh Oak Park, JIL, om rue yards to @ touchdown in the : High School, 1910-1913, Hiinols, 19 : sent Charley fading seconds of the third period, among the top coaches in football history. repairs before 44,000 determin make = “A master of football trickery deception, invented start of a beautiful friendship. Took para pg “flea hon. eamie-dasie” giaats of Coach Hawkeyes Polite and “flying trapeze.” He retired from active coaching st the end had made nol With only excepAll- in their own tions, the Hawkeyes tackling was § Shae tones, Saeed ine i hs HE oe I he bioceing. ron 3 of his time at Champaign, Ill, pursuing his art work, defeat tively polite for almos # : perfect team. Tiinols worst since three quarters. Oregon's smooth a en. Tiimols an on a Wednes- Hoe was seguited ground attack and alert defense; a very OPPONENTS night to meet Gophers Saturday, , 4, 1916, not a / " and almost rushed NEXT ay peasant prospec atu a gan i (be Mimnasos reco ota St. Ann's CYO Cadet football team is fied for first place in fwo of th ine Soh 2 Se ent Miitiesots 67, lows 0. Minnsita 81, Sc 180. | League. The feam members are, front row, left to right, Bob Smith, Jim Richardson, east, of SEUNG |caeciaily iat Tames, ands) LL Ap Be Jon Radidan, Tom Brownies, Charlie Eliot and Jerry Keedy. Second row: Jos Wissel, Jack snd a cast Specially aguinst pestss, made (Sloweys Chapman, Harold Macomber was & great hall) \j, or John Bauer, Ronald Rickelman, John Reuter and ames Collignon. Third row: Jack Smothers Justice. for its sixth straight defeat by a Pop, Rory, Car a ng fa on the gromd | Pol Abie, Cocrge Julie, Dor Bac twbec bin Cyl Filth row: BA oe es "is "geston Jenin. 34 a to Minnesota fumbled on the five- and Job . row: :Juarfer gle x |nis cohorts on the pround. Andito 6, Longley took Jim CalderColgate; Ohio State and Chicago,(yard line OCIS a Bus Oyler, surg [Wem they took the alr Volunteer |wood's high punt in the corner, ’ scoreless with were forced — were everywhere, 18aping of the field on Iowa's 6-y ' Rand a ue wa kicked to Dutch Sternaman, our! and batting down passes. a, known as a defensive . Ring Lardner predicted a 49-0 night aitnack. = Sant the 4 Mpviens was ott gute on end, picked up blockers and went defeat for Illinois. puis ibe star all the way, It was a record pun Thie was the setting that Sat-|Gopber (yard mack. A FETCH that was Wi) toy Catoliug, "TWO return for Lows. : jammed|smash gained nothing, and then ’ plays Ia ae 37.076 cash-paying fans let qarday as 20.000 _pecpls Jam called for a spread forma- fumble on the North Carolina { the ola wooden stands at Minne- | Hlinols ck Payne cir-|out a roar and for the first time | apolis to see the Gophers roll on|tion. a new play in which the cled right end to score and the fowa began playing like the team in a game which they were call-/linemen spread out ix yabds from ed 3 that upset Northwestern last ing a cinch at 20 to 1. and quoting|*ach other {he non In the second period Littleford| week. They added three touch the sale 18 SQURES Oo hauled back & Justice punt to the| downs, two of them by Fullback This wus the Hung point Carolina 27, then rushed and|Bill Reichardt, in the fourth peGophers Betuddles passed to the one-foot line again. riod, then staved off a last-min-Fullback Bernie ,| ute Oregon surge to win. Minnesota didn’t know whether another sophomore, slammed over| That final quarter had barely to play opposite the man or op- center, ; started when Iowa Tackle Don posite the hole between our line-| Still playing like they couldn't, Winslow recovered Oregon men. Macomber then passed to) believe it, the North Carolinians Tackle Sam Nevilles’ fumble of Sternaman for a 25-yard gain, immediately gave away two more the lows iiefeoft on Oregans =. ran over 3 ew plays later, Sess or the iret tonchdows on Dn kes nine the 32. Halfback Jerry Faske the T. : x : The : gone. Justice recovered but was| passed to End Jack Dittmer for formation, Macomber also kicked St. Joan of Arc's CYO Cadet football team is undefeated in five league games. tackled by Tennessee tack le|another touchdown. the extra point and it was 7 to 0. ing grade-schoolers go after No. 6 today when they meet St. Patrick's at and Arsenal at 2 prank Boring for a safety. Four Points Away mighty Gophers had Yieided This is the way the boys fined up for Times photographer. From the left (front fo back), the Sag tors & lected to receive! for are Bud Moore, Tom , Kenny McDermott and Frank Abrams, rig h ' | North Carolina, sorely missing} n now, but Oregon counMiimots 4 yoaan tried] Bernard Cooper and John Swent, right tackles: Jack Wieck, Pat Sloyan, Dan Schreiner and Joo [Art Weiner, its elegant end out|tered with its fourth and last Sad. on Ag combina-| Starlim, right guards; Jim McCahill, center; Mike Noone, Joe Wade and Tom Moran, quarterbacks; with an infected foot, fried to/touchdown en Left Half Johnny ton of Wyman 5 Basten i cote | £6 Weber. Ed Sulien and Mike Dinein, th guards; Frank ler, To Noge S10 M0 Riack Gordon Paotey mtr The 0-pound. Reiohards took } § tom + : : t ) charge. He returned the Oregon greatest pass combinations ot] loh, tight halfbacks; Tom Lord, fullback; Brendan, Adams and Ronny Johnson, left halfbacks. Site Ties Jaap Do the, iekort 99 yards to a touchdown, footnall mstory: ADS Ja eu! ~ Hank Lauricella, another ofand a few Jing later stashed an : a ’ over for another one—the one was there to intercept. He ran 55 Indiana Gels Late Start, Tempers Flare aire rt Rocsy|that meant victory—atter End od Macomber wick Pade ha Just ove tha goul. | |Dob, Pcl, "Seunact Fela” on and 1 10 0. Loses to Badgers, 30-14 In the third period Littieford the Towa 19. The Gophers fought back : \ lic gs passed 26 yards to end Charles| Oregon refused to be licked and and in the third] (Continued From ‘age 38) Embach came in to hold the ball Cummins on the two, and he/marched from its 45 to the Hawkthey made it 14 to 7. We for a field goal attempt by Black- . stepped over. - ° » eye four in the game's final minplayed this game with the original 2COFIng twice on the ground andibourn. Instead. Embach got boi Ohio State Trips End Bud Sherrod intercepted utes, But Sanders fumbled ; a semi- Hayes’ . 13 men. The clash was scarcely three Hogsler left = to score un-| Wildcats, 24-7 Billy Pass and raced 25.and although Calderwood recov
ered, the Ducks lost 15 yards on the play. They lost five more on a penalty and were desperately {trying to score when the final gun went off. 7
Cornell Routs Columbia, 54-0
ITHACA, N. Y., Oct, 29. (UP)
victory of the season.
play this year.
las t-quarter touchdowns caused William Malone,
ished from the game, field ace, injured his Jeft
second half. ’
sectional game.
first quarter by Bob Matthews,
Vanderbilt Coasts
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
In Vanderbilt's previous
lead and then coasted a bit.
TRYON'S ALL-STARS CINCINNATI, OHIO
Gale Admission $1, Tax Included
“AT BOX OFFICE AV SPEEDROME WE Gates Openat 11:30 A. M. * + Preliminary Gome ut 12:30 Games to be played rain or shine
_ 0. game Nov. 6 will be given to He purchasers of Sefayed Tickets
Sparkplug of the Buffglo at-|. tack was Sophomore Fullback] Merwin Model who scored both'lor University of Upland, Ind. Colorado" touchdowns by plunging over from the 2-yard line. Utah’s lone scare came in the
Oct.” 29 (UP)—For the first time this season Vanderbilt didn't wait until the last minute to win or lose today, cheering a homecoming crowd of 25,000 by rolling to an easy 26 to 7 victory over Auburn, three wins and two losses the victory margin ranged gnly from one to ven poin oday | losers chalked up their first one pea built ut a ay the Come
Sh NE A NA NE AEA NEN AE AE a NE NE A ENE NN NEN MN A 0 NA 0 A A 2
Yr VYYYYYYrYYYS
Taylor U. Wins, 41:6
NEXT OPPONENTS Tavior at Ashland, O. Bluffton at Defiance, 0.
day by defeating the Bluff grid ders 41-6,
—Breaking loose with a terrific fourth period offensive which netted five touchdowns, Cornell routed a hapless Columbia eleven, 54 to 0, today for its sixth successive
Rebounding from its close call with Princeton last week, the power-ladenr Cornell team smashed through, around and over the out-manned New Yorkers to treat a partisan crowd: of 25,000 to its greatest scoring dis-
Taking advantage of every break, the veteran Big Red elgven istruck with relentless fury, causing frayed Columbia tempers to flare late in the game. Resulting penalties set up one of Cornell's and Columbia’s defensive center, to be ban-
Hilary Chollet, Cornell's backleg
slightly in the rough play and was forced out of action early in the
spoiled Bluffton College's home-
coming and 50th anniversary to-
ut
U3
To Tune of 33-1
Bob Celeri Sparks Hard-Fought Win 108 ANGELES, Oct. 20 (UP) ~University of Californias foot-
Oregon at Washington. {ball wizard, Bob Celeri, passed
and ran the Golden Bears a step. nearer the Rose Bowl today with a 35 to 21 victory over a bardfighting UCLA team. The victory did not come easily to California, despite Celeri's brilliance, as the UCLA players took a second-pe-riod 14 to 7 lead and held their rivals to a 14 to 14 tie at half time. But Celéri converted 58,668 fans in Memorial Coliseum to his cause as a prospective All-America play= er with his passing, running and kicking: Without Celeri, Calls fornia might have had trouble; wth him, the Bears were too much for UCLA.
Ravens Eke Out 21-0 Victory
unbeaten in Hoosier College Con= ference play here today squeesz-
NEXT OPPONENTS ne a ing out a 27 to 20 victory over Indiana Central in the final 30 seconds, Anderson Halfback Jim Maeholtz plunged over from the one yard line to give the Ravens the clincher goal. Bob Asher passed to Tom Redmond for the extra point: . Both clubs tallied in the first. Central took the lead on Bob Wheeler's 27-yard sprint and Anderson tied it up With Macholtz passing to Redmond. Macholtz hit Redmond again and tossed to Gerald Dodd in the second quarter while Central stayed close with Bill Crowe’s 61-yard run, The Greyhounds tied it up in the third quarter as Crowe stepped off 47 yards, but the Ravens countered with their last-minute drive to win, Anderson ....... 718 0 7-27 Indians Central 7 6 7 0-20
Additional Sports, Page 44
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