Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1950 — Page 21
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Capitol Ave; in the home, Robert. Burania St., will yw in Shirley Chapel. He
rown Hill y one of Inar, nose and He was aswith a son, man, at 411 1g. : i reared in d Hved and apolis since luated from School of d served as in World
on the medlist, St. Vinospitals, and sity Medical
uded the InAssociation, ical Soelety, apolis Acadgy and Otoierican Largical and 1d American
mber of the 26, -Americ Lodge at ne and the n Church. .- Burrell, he fe, Mrs. Maanother son, n, Indianap8. N, Linge-
six brothers,” Brownsburg; Muncie; Dr, , Maryville, man, Crawh B. Linge- + and Frank seven’ grandits.
ites day rvice Jan. 6— H. Berry of yesterday in Hospital in . 2:30 p. m. Wilson Fuurial will be ry. He was
he lived in t of his life, f the White-
two sons,
Berry, both ughter, Mrs. f Logan, W, ren and two
'mey and Lucy Cotton McGaw. tO ease the tedium of a financier’s
ret-be. _fessionally.. Who knows but
. aif 2 i
“to ‘admit that the: social tone offafter witnessing ‘Steve Hamas
Has Boxing Los _ Social Touch? Tear Shed for Top-Hatted Or Mink-Coated Sponsors
heavyweight for a pal,” Mr, Wood man recalls. “So favor,” :
a 10-rounder he lost to Paolino
Uzeudun, the old tusked Basque.)
Maiting to get weighed is
True, he scored a one- round
activity that dated back to the early English, Others kept Put this was a co-operative job them around seemingly as house Which could not have been pets. brought to a desirable climax At various times the fight Without the loser's sympathetic racket was embellished by .the 2nd competent assistance. ? likes of Tony Biddle, Walter 48" Chrysler, Ed Hutton, Jock Whit-| BROKER ED HUTTON Sought
Not to neglect Anne Morgan, of life in the "20% by trying to make the Morgans, who once B. of champion out of a young light tioned as match-maker for the heavyweight whom I seem to reold Madison Square Garden, Miss Member as Roy Wallace. It is Morgan's show, a benefit, was a/not my impression that Wallace smash success both as a braw] — !f that was the name — ever and as a draw. It was clearly| turned in any epochal works, and
evident she had an extraordinary/this despite the fact his class 3 : meek’ thing. room exercises were conducted by SHS URES away waa toy |muirilered the big guy. aa] sh . | Mr, Hutton kep s beast In ROW Jie. Would be A4mipingly andi, im Beach one winter and he affectionately known as the grand ab dame of the caulifiower world, |Was quite a novelty among the s = » socialites. Mr. Hutton allowed TONY BIDDLE—or A. J. Drex- him to go out unleashed and unel Biddle Jr, to dress him up/muzzied and it was a fair measproper for you-—-was an ardent ure of his docility that even the fancier of pugs before he re-| Smallest children would pet him nounced the idiosyncrasy for life without the slightest show of fear among the continental diplomats.[20d feed him sugar Qaiuties It is my recollection that he wen fetched from the corner pastry to $50,000 to obtain the rights to|ShoP. a the lethal forces of one Rene de| sof HAY WHITNEY, more Vos who was accused of being the ,.q4ly recognized in sports as middleweight champion of Europe joe or Jocko, was led into the at the time, /fight racket by his ffiend, Gene
Mr. Biddle had boundless pride Tunney, who felt that the noted open-neck sport shirt despite Min-| in his brute and took immense phorseman might find the switch/neapolis’ sub-zero weather, further)
delight in exhibiting him before|trom plugs to pugs a diverting; his friends. One night he held a gqventure. Abe Simon was his coming out party for De Vos iniman. Abe was a vast hulk of] a private banquet room at the gnarled muscle who stayed around glossy Hotel St. Regis. It was seven or eight years and fought attended by what might charita- Joe Louis twice, lasting 13 and 8 bly be called a mixed crowd. De-|in that order. But by the time mocracy went berserk’ while two Abe was in there with Louis, bands—Ben Bernie and Vincent Mr. Whitney, having decided he Lopez—alternated with the preferred horses, after all, had dreamy bleats, {pulled out, ) Mr. Biddle gave unstintingly| Lucy Cotton McGaw became an with the grape. It distresses me/avid patroness of the fistic arts
the gathering deteriorated in al-/stiffen Tommy Loughran and most exact ratio to the quantityitried to buy his contract from of bubbly consumed, and it de-|old Charley Harvey. Mr. Harvey veloped later that one of the items|{was not adverse to accepting a on Mr. Biddle’s bill read thus: “To|cash contribution to be applied to breakage . . . $600.” the enlargement of his fighter’'s . ‘sw = {career but beyond that he would IT WAS PROBABLY just asinot go. well that Walter Chrysler didn’t] But as Mr. Woodman laments, withdraw from the automotive you don’t find these people wantfield entirely when he succumbed ing to buy into your fighter any to the fascination of pugilism and more. “Say, you don't think invested $35,000 in the fighting they've turned to the wrestlers, assets, if any, of one Knute Han- do you?” asked Langford’'s old sen, formerly the property of the manager in wild panic.
He'll Buy Club
% 23 ¥
TU Vesdk, v
To Play at Tech
Veeck Denies
MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 5 (UP)— Bill Veeck, who recently sold the Cleveland Indians baseball club, sald today he’s “not buying any baseball team at present.” | “If I should change my mind, though, it wouldn't make any difference whether it happened to be a major or a minor league club, Dubuque or Detroit, just so i %
n! i 1 MH EARN éported to ve IAT FdRted in the New York Giants, said he had no definite plans as far as| baseball is concerned. “Just call me a wanderer, a drifter, a vagabond,” he said. But for a man without plans, Veeck had plenty of ideas.
Picks Red Sox He readily announced that the! Boston Red Sox should win the) American League pennant this| year, and that the Boston Braves] should take the National. Casey Stengel, he said, can’t win again with the Yankees. | Veeck, wearing his
i famous
predicted that Bob Feller-is going: to put in a “good year” at Cleveland because the famed fastballer has “changed from a thrower to a pitcher.” Bob Lemon, though, won| Veeck's nomination as ° the
Veeck foresaw a bright future for Dick Wakefield, the Ss0.000) bonus player who was traded by
York Yankees this winter.
into a consistently good player,” Veeck said.” ‘“‘He just couldn’t get going with the Tigers.”
Central. The site of the game
water, The Warren Central-Crispus Attucks game, originally sched-|
Oklahoma City U. to Drop Football Due to Losses |
|
Won't Resume Until it Has Better | Facilities and Schedules, President Says
to drop the sport temporarily from its athletic program. | University President C. Q. Smith, in announcing that football | was being discontinued, blamed poor attendance and inadequate stadium facilities for the action. — TT
during the 1949 season. 1% . “Football will be Mscontinue| 1TIMS Muncie
until such time as we may pe, Up-and-coming South Bend Cenable to provide better stadiumtral, No. 5 in the United Press|
facilities and better schedules.” |high school basketball rankings, |
He said OCU would concentrate today held its eighth win in nine! on ‘basketball as a major.sport|starts. -
tramural competition. {in trimming seventh-ranked MunThe announcement came after| Cle Central, 55 to 44, despite a 28a meeting with players and the Point performance by Muncie's coaching staff yesterday. It was Tom Harold. It was 16-14 at the| agreed that all contract obliga- Art quarter, 3hd the Soutn Bend tions would be honored—meaning “en® held a t0-25 lead at the that scholarships would be con-| : ed ad onthe ares man 27 Hts Germs, Ne, 10 tained until June 1, when they h h { expire, Orville Tuttle, coach, said he will be in the mar-| and toppled
and- put more emphasis on its in-| South Bend led at every post| I
65 to 56 for Gerst-
ket for another job when football Meyer's second loss in Rinel . ; ‘With White Sox
| CHICAGO, Jan. 6 (UP)
is officially dropped at OCU, | games.
During World War II OCU did
acre Me. —Herm 1M. ESTO, Rr, PI 2 + Trenton, N. J. 10),
Phe gi TT Glows. 142 Ri: Montey racing
tinued at Garden State Park ex-|
season, the New Jersey Racing! Commission announced yesterday in apportioning dates at three
{parks for the coming year.
ings, had a rough time with the| head football fast-breaking attack of Paris, Ill, |
will be discon-|
cept for one day during the 1950 formerly was assistant athletic
uled, Jan. 14, has been moved up! played at Tech. and Southport will journey four-team tourney.
tral at 2:45. meet at 8:15 p. m.
Sa Attucks Game Postponed Detroit's next scheduled National Smith said that OCU lost “ap-| * proximately $25,000” on er South Bend Five | thes, the Cloverdale at Crispus),
Due to transportation difficul-|
their
he will Reserves of Tech, Broad Ripple Sawchuk, to games. Harry Lumley, goalie for |Warren Central Jan. 13 for a the parent Detroit Red Wings, Broad Ripple ‘was d efi ) 7D OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. Jan. 6 (UP) —Oklahoma City Uni- and Southport will play at PP ured in a benefit hockey versity’s football future looked dark today as authorities planned |p. m., and Tech and Warren Cen- City. The winners will ankle
Wally Middlesworth and Tom Miller (left to right at table) register the first group of 1950 Golden Gloves entrants. Reaistering left to right are, Bill Clark, 160-pound Open; Charles McNerney, 135-pound Novice; Dick Hurt, 126-pound Novice; Homer Cannedy, 126-pound Novice; d Novice, and Gene Delaney, 147-pound Novice.
It's an even dozen
third
straight |seventh in 10 starts. HS W. Ceniral-Bouth {played 11 such games this season. e Warren Central-S8outhport| pe one point gained gave Ingame tonight will be played at| dianapolis a two-point edge in Tech High instead of at Warren second place over St. Louis. To-
, morrow night, was switched because Warren the Flyers in St. Louis and re-
Central's parking lot is under i, rn here Sunday night to battle Pittsburgh in the Coliseum.
They have
Charles Famroy, ,126-poun
Paul J. McDuff, chairman of the Golden Gloves committee, checks the scales as Jerry McKinney, 126.
pounder, weighs in, Bob Johnson, 112 pounds.
“Wakefield is going to change weaker teams. Last night for the second successive night, the Caps {played a tie game with Cincinnati, coming from behind to gain a 3-3 split in the Coliseum before 3312 fans. ” | For the Mohawks, wallowing in — ‘last place in the American Hockey
Warren, Southport League's Western Division, it was
tie
the Caps
May Be Minus Sawchuk
Coach’ Ott Heller is awaiting {to Thursday, Jan. 12, and will be word today from Detroit whether have his goalie, both
for
last night He suffered
Attucks basketball game sched-|cyneinnati.
uled for tonight has been postponed. . }
Rangers Giving Rookie
y INDIANAPOLIS Goal. Sawchuk; De. Terry fense, Quackenbush, Lund. Center. Uniac; |} week-end Wings, Podolsky, R_ Morrison Spares Dewsbury. Raglan, Woit., Wiseman, MeKay. Reed, Sclisizzi, Lundy, Glover Cincinnati—Goal, - McNeil Defense, Irwin Bla Center, Campeau:. Wings
an
in the Motor injured
first period when Tod Campeau’s
Caps Set for Rough Siege. Honors Awarded After 12 Without Defeat
Come From Behind to Get 3-3 Tie greatest Pheler 18 the gjors - With Mohawks Before 3312 Fans
By BILL EGGERT games without a defeat as the Indianapolis
the Detroit Tigers to the New! Caps get set for a rough hockey week-end.
Hockey: players are subject to-relaxation when playing againstiynapolis table tennis courts, 3208
meet
4 Tr oe
Outh! I's tough ‘when you slip over the weight limit.
weight. Trainer Tiny Bland tries fo rub it off.
w——— me —————————————— tnt ——n
In Table Tennis
The Eli Lilly (Kentucky Av
1
with Richardson Co. {second in the eight-club loop.
E. Michigan 8t., results were
Wm. H. Block 5. Eli Lilly No. 1 Pittman-Moore 5. Eli Lilly (No. 2) 4
9:01 in the final period with Phil Hergesheimer getting the tally on help from Bob Frampton and Wally Stefanik. Big Bus Gagnon made
undefeated in league competiti
nd Final standings: EN Lilly (Ken Ave) Richardson Co m
it 3-2
for the Mohawks at 17:46. Then BL INES) while he was sitting out two Pittman-Moore Ell Lilly (No. 1)
won -1moe Oe =
minutes for tripping Rod Morri- Gibson .Co . son, Rod slapped a rebound by Hoi Coal & Ol}
Pe oanamol
| Times-Legion T
- ) Antone Holevas, 135-Novice, had to take off a fraction of a pound to make PM In the ring.
team won first place award\in the Industrial Table Tennis League finishing
In final tilts last night at Indi-\receive special awards for win-'a second time.
Ell Lilly (Kentucky Ave) 7, Richardson
— —— Co. 2; Hoosier Coil & Oil 8, Gibson Co. 3: J A N I A R Y } 4 A J
Eli Lilly (Kentucky Ave.) was!
“| CLEARANCE i of
2 Richardson
Begins at 8 P. M.; 15 to 20 Bouts Set
National Guard Armory to Be Scene ' Of Renewal of Amateur Boxing Event
By JIM HEYROCK The 17th renewal of The Times-Legion Golden Gloves Tournament opens at 8 tonight in the National Guard ‘Armory, 711 N. Pennsylvania St., with the. staging of 15 to 20 bouts. : Number of bouts on tonight's card, which opens five weeks of campaigning for the amateurs, will be determined iby how rapidly the fighters (finish their scheduled three- winners also will receive special round tiffs. awards. Each participant in the
The Golden Gloves committee, tourney will get a prize. Rounds of the tourney will be each Friday night with the finals on Feb. 3. 4
Erdelatz, Navy Keep on Talking:
today. ANNAPOLIS. Md., Jan. 8 (UP) Local Fighters Weigh In Unable to reach an agreement Indianapolis entrants, with a after a 10-hour conference yesterfew exceptions, weighed in yester- day, Eddie Erdelatz, Navy's first day at the Armory hetween noon chajce to succeed Head Football
and 6 p. m. Out-of-town fighters | } . were to weigh in today between 3 Coach George Sauer who resigned last week, will resume negotia-
and 6 p. m. Each fighter was required* to tions today with academy athletic {register with the Golden Gloves a ials. Committee and with the Ameri- ’ 1 Erdelatz, former §St. Mary's (can Athletic Union and undergo a star. who was end coach at Navy
strict examination in addition to from 1945 to 1947, went through
Ja 7 Nos
ning their divisions. The Novice
|headed by Paul J. McDuff, plans {to send the bouts into the squared lcircle as fast as possible, two |Aghters waiting while each bout
| ‘The youngsters will not know {their opponents until shortly be-| fore the fights, Drawings will be {made by the committee following completion of weigh-ins at 6 p. m.
} {
weighing-in. Two doctors inspected the amateurs in the ® 10ng session with academy rmory medical room heads “yesterday in-which- details ’ 27; iecugaed., x
5
| see action »tonighi... The fghter LENS ot >a PAN weights probably will start off the [Savy Kthletie-directon, sald 4hat show. These divisions, 112-pound, there is no sense of emergency 118-pound, 126-pourtd, 135-pound, In filling the position. \are sprinkled with champions] “We are looking into every [from last year. But many have phase of the thing,” Caldwell said.
‘advanced to higher divisions.
i Advances One Class - J | For eEreaple Ralph Saxton Two Ton Tony To Wrestle Here
the. Senate Avenue YMCA was One of the features of next
{the 112-pound winner last year| {but has grown into the 118-pound| class for this tourney. Walter . | Haywood, Leeper's Gym. won the Tuesday night's Armory wrestling |bantamweight crown last year|Card will be the first local apbut has advanced to the light. pearance of “Two-Ton Tony” | weight ranks now. Galentto, Matchmaker Billy “Thom Horace Sumner will be defend- pac announced.
ing his lightweight crown, won « . ‘last year. These three are in the Galento will tangle with Herbie Freeman of New York, in one of
(Open. Class anq will be batiling the two main event attractions Indi 1 for a spot on the Indianapolis signed by Thom.
{team that will represent the city {in the annual Tournament of The other headliner of the Champions in Chicago in Feb-|/double-windup pits Tom Marshall, {ruary. This team will be com- young Texas heavy, against The e.) posed of the eight winners in the Zebra Kid, in a return bout, Open Class. Marshall béat the masked 336In addition to the chance to pounder last week and the Kid participate in the Chicago Tour- has agreed to reveal his identity
_-inament, the Open winners will if Marshall can turn the trick
143
McNeil for the tying goal at 18:14. O'Banion of Clare Raglan had set up the final goal skating the length of the arena and taking a headonm shot at ‘McNeil who stopped that one but couldn't move fast enough for Rod’s recovery.
ibe, Loca Spares, Deslaurier Levine
s s Hergesheimer, Frampton,
Hirschfeld, Stef aniw, Gagnon, Moore . Officials Referee, Charles McVeigh
head linesman. Johnny Sorrell
co 8 SCORE BY PERIODS and llapsed or the ice INDIANABOOS ops 3 while playing a wing position. Cincinnati 1 0 2-3 SCORING SUMMARY rst Periods 1 Sincinnay Dube ‘Cami eat’ enalties—Deslauriers (holdLeague tilt is Sunday night. | fan 8.17. Glover (roughing i» 11 49. Gas-~ The Caps had to come from non (roughing and Oghting:, LL 4% wot " erio , IN N/ - ehind twice last night to tie (Lundy, Wiseman, 2133 3. INDIANAPLIS, . Podolsky (Quackenbush), 18:58 Pe rer Periog. 4. C i ti, Hergeshe X i rio inecinnati, 4] - Nets 30-Foot Shot |rjmer.Prampion. fistanien) 9 LBS ( * elmer), i D Gilles Dube got a cheap goal INDIANAPOLIS: Rr $Morrison Raglan| : 18:47. Penalties — Glover (roughing) for the Mohawks at 2:09 in the [3:48 (eoie" (foushing Sclisizzi
15:46 (tripping). 16:16; Gagnon (tripping), 18:14
Co., and Jack Clark, Eli Lilly (Kentucky Ave.), tied for top individual scoring laurels. Individual awards were made to the top eight players. The leaders: Ww
Bill O
Banion Jack Clark
Hugh Thorpe 2 Tom Bweeney 25 A new league is to be formed
with play beginning on Thursday evening, Feb. 2. Industrial teams are requested to phone Rudy Stufmpp, FR-6143.
> w -a abana
— =»
3-Game Tryout 11 front of Sawengic. Terry never ON. the Ice | , ' ; ) U NEW YORK, Jan. 6 (UP)—The got his stick on the puck. [ AER REY a TAGUE | New York Rangers announced = Defensemar Bennie Woit tied it cieveland RAE TY bis today that amateur Bill’ Kyle, a yp at 1-1 for the Caps at 2:33 in INDIANAPOLIS ._ 17 12 14 ns a left wing, would report to the the second. period whizzing a 30- Blitsbureh Is 15 8 38 104 103 club immediately for a three- {got shot by Goalie Gerry Mc- C'RcinRet orn’ Disision - 87 152 ] game tryout. ‘» |Neil and Nelson Podolsky put the rk Fis GOO) Kyle, who 1s 24, is a brother of |ocals out in front, 2-1, at 18:58 Bufaie -".' Nh 18 108 Kt . ga to Tar and 2a rg trae on Me LR Soot grees pe 8 e fenseman Max Quackenbush. ershey y Irdd nloir : Play-by-Play Rebroadcast Regina Caps ih the Western Ca- (Cincinnati, a much improved INDIANABOLIS. 3 Cincinnati 3 (tier y-oy y nadian Senior Hockey League. club since the start of the season, Srimencla o Hermnes © 0° SOUTHPORT VS. tet reeeet mem rallied with its second goal at NAR APOT ' y . ompmepre Jen INDLARATOLIS 3% "WARREN CENTRAL
18 Players Sign
CHICAGO, Jan. 8 (UP) —George sein. bus
day Races Dropped] : FEATURE Monday Races Dropped ;.raner. for three years executive minutes; GA, Proais against; BO, Shut:
‘TRENTON, N. J, Jan. 6 — assistant to President Avery L
Cap Scoring
P, games nts.
COOWINDI ADV VO DWN
tt ptt pt
DOW IL VNR IIB“ DANSE DO >
A 36 as played; “GQ,
not field football teams, but in Shortstop Signs Up |Chicago White Sox have signed Din Sion 3 1946, when the sport was resumed) CHICAGO, Jan. 6 (UP) — Alja total of 18 players to 1950 con- Rod Morrison 38 with Bo Rowland as head coach,(warzycki, a Detroit shortstop, tracts, they announced today. |Lecll Witeman 1 the team won 10 and lost only nag signed a 1950 contract with| The clib sald contracts were £rtd Olover a one, The following year the Chiefs yh, Chicago White Sox’ Colorado|recelved yesterday from Out-| Nelson Podolsky .. 33 Won sevén and 10st three. Springs farm team, farm director fielder George Metkovich, Catcher | Jo ‘rang’ 3» Tuttle succeeded Rowland after| jon, Rigney announced today. Don Wheeler and Rookie Pitchers Max Quackenbush . 36 i the 1947 season. Warzycki played with the semi-Luis Aloma, formerly with Buf-| Gordon Haidg . . 18 pro Glace Bay Miners in Nova/falo, and Ken Holcombe, formerly {lars Raglan . 3 Fight Results Scotia am summer and led his|with Sacramento. on oJReller 2 ! United le batting with a .309| eee : NEW a +" Rens) sohnmy 1 } . GOALIN'S AVERAGE ., Raith in. oy ae Quits Olympic Board | Sawehuk % S
| A Sunday Pant Dittsburgh at INDIAN. . AS, 3 D gfiel at’ lufialo Pts PIM Aeahes at New RT Cleveland Yat 34 8 Providence, Bt. Louis at Cincinnati 29 10 — . Bo i 2 fy Howe Frosh Win 3 2¢. Tech High School's freshman i 33 basketball squad was handed its 12 32{third straight defeat yesterday, 13 1425 to 22, to Howe In the Tech 11 2 9 17 gym. ———i ) 9 _26 Tye ' 8 9 ’ 0 6 Avg 80
~1TRWw 2 soals; IM, penalties
Springfield, New Haven at Cleveland, Cin-
{einnati at Pittsburgh
Brundage of the U. 8. Olympic Association, resigned today. He
director at Indiana University.
Additional Sports
On Pages 22, 23
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