Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1950 — Page 33
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FRIDAY, OCT. 13,1050 _____
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' __. _ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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SU Tilt Tops Hoosier
Purdue Faces ‘Dream’ Golf Course
Miami; Butler Being Built Near City,
Ready Late Next Year
Bill Diddel Plans 18-Hole Layout : On 116th St., Just Off Ind. 431
: By JIM HEYROCK i . A PLAN FOR A “dream” golf course near Indianapolis, which Set at Central began 19 years ago, is fast becoming a reality. By FRANK ANDERSON The course is the brain-child of William (Bill) Diddel, one of Tomorrow's not Arbor Day— the nation’s foremost golf architects, who is piling 27 years of ex{but Indiana University will try perience in golf course construction into a super layout at 116th planting some Buckeyes in Bloom- St. and Ind. 431. It is in Hamilton County. ; ington. : The course still is in the rough ————————o If the Hoosiers can tree Ohio giage, but by late next summer, The first nine wit start near state it could mean that Coach{yy. Diddel expects to have hisithe entrance and run southeast: Clyde Smith has Big 10champi-| course ready for play. At first glance an observer would jonship timber. No matter what! It will be something new in golf{believe thre course will be a flat {the outcome the tilt is the state's/course construction, with onlyjone, similar to Sarah Shank. Ac{game of the day. {eight sand traps on the 18-hole|tually there is only one flat hole, {With the Hoosiers in Blooming- layout. But it is over tricky ter-|No. 4. iton and Purdue playing host' to rane. Mr. Diddel, who seems tol The land has a gentle roll, Miami of Florida in Lafayette lay out a golf course as easily as which makes many blind shots two-thirds of ‘ the state's Big/the ordinary person draws a necessary and should cause the Three are at home. Notre Dame straight line on a piece of paper, best golfers no end of trouble. |goes south to New Orleans and a is making a layout that will be Woods, mostly oaks and poplars, ‘date with Tulane, taking with it easier than any in the area for|line the fairways. {bitter memories of last week's the “duffer” but still a challenge! At the present time there are istunning upset at thd hands. of for the par-shooter. three farm buildings at the en- | Purdue. #2 8 8 trance to the course. They will Bulldogs in Munck IT ALL started back in 1931 be made over into equipment i gs In uncle while Diddel was in the process shops and locker roo | Butler's Bulldogs and most of of building 36-hole Kesiwned ® faa ooms: [the state's secondary schools stay course in Cincinnati and another Co FB lin Hoosierland's backyard. Butler at Hot Springs, Ark. THE NINTH GREEN and 10th linvades Ball State in quest of The soft-spoken, gray-thatched tee od be located near the Diddel lits first win. Indjanapolis’ other Diddel, who planned and super- 30. Longest hole on the layinstitution of higher learning, vised the construction of Coffin, out be the’ 14th hole, 590 \Indiana Central, has a homecom- Speedway, Meridian Hills, Sarah Ya ong. ing tilt scheduled with Manches- Shank, Hillcrest and others in| lddel belikves that a golf {ter at Delavan Smith Field. the Indianapolis area, purchased Sree can Se interesting and Unbeaten, but once tied, Wa- the 178 acres at 116th Street and _ WA Winout having many {bash tests Knox College in Craw- Ind. 431 with the idea of building - ow an ho oh some of the |fordsville. Earlham travels to a top-flight golf course. visualized might disevpear be. {Taylor, Rose Poly is at Franklin| He planned the course and fore the ee is completed “ and Indiana State is at St. Jo- talked with groups about making ‘Op IC CORTESE Bo TI o \seph’s in other state day games.|a club at the location. But the, wo 0 Fo 00 melt Hanover goes to Canterbury and Plans failed to jell. for the par-busting golfer. The |Kenyon of Ohio tries Huntington Diddel built a log cabin, which greens will be large in area but in night engagements. now serves as his summer home, they will be longer and narrower Three other teams go abroad and another cabin used fOFn,; the average, making. them for their sport. Evansville and Buests, and Sontinued to Plan XR more difficult to approach. Par Morris Harvey mix it up at night repare ihe tand for the day Wen for the course will be 36-36-72. in Charleston, W. Va.; Valparaiso, ® ou u iS. course. What does the 66-year-old Did$s he planned, between sum- i } ‘still unbeaten after three games, mers at the loz cabin and winters del plan to do with his new travels to Illinois to meet Augus- g course? That is uncertain. He
in his winter home at Palm i tana, and DePauw makes Ober- : is building at the present with a jp Beach, Fla, Diddel was building public course in mind, where goif-
iin 5 homecoming complete’ in golf courses throughout the coun- i. Rk I" | Ohio. . try. Since 1923 he has had a °° an play without being Title Preview hand in the construction of be- crowded. 4-8 The Indiana-Ohio State scrap tween 150 and 200 golf courses. , has all the earmarks of titular There is hardly a layout in the BUT he will also issue a longambition. The Hoosiers already state that he hasn't worked on in 'ér™ lease to the right group, have done better than they did in {some manner. i with an option to buy.
1949. They followed up a 20-20 s &£ = tie with Nebraska with a 20-7 FOR THE PAST year and a load of trophies, including the In-
upset of Iowa last Saturday. But half he has been building his own diana Amateur championship they'll have their hands full in course, seeding fairways, laying numerous times, is primarily in{the Buckeyes, defending Big 10 tile, arranging greens. terested in doing something for lco-champjons and the Rose Bowl At the present time, the en- the game of golf. { conqueror of California. {trance to the Diddel property is “I've played golf a long time.” | The Buckeyes took a 32-27 loss three-tenths of a mile off Ind. 431/says the well-conditioned Diddel, | from Southern Methodist and on 116th St. The entrance to the who still shoots in the 70s, “and {came. back strong last week to course, however, will be 208 yards I've had a lot out of golf—my dump Pittsburgh, 41-7, with Left off Ind. 431 and a road will wind good health and my living for the {Half Vic Janowicz at the con- through the woods to a clubhouse past 27 years. I.owe it something. |trols. which will be located where Did- And I believe I can partially re- | The meeting, the 32d between |del's log cabin now stands. pay it with this course.”
the two teams, is expected to at-| tgs . — ig Fi on me muckeree nave neater Fl@dden to Guide Tryons {the Hoosiers the last two times > : mann iss meso eerie Ag Dimancheff Replacemen | Boris Granted Leave of Absence to Be
Purdue on Guard ! Purdue, guarding against a let- : J > With Ill Daughter; Smock to Assist Assistant Coach Frank (Pop) Hedden will guide the undefeated
Hits Road
Bulldogs, Ball State ~- Clash; . Homecoming |
Diddel, who has won a truck
{down, faces an unbeaten team in Miami’s Hurricanes. The Boiler-
+ {makers lost a 34-26 decision to mpyon All-Stars, local semiprofessional. football team, the remain-
{Texas before humbling the jor of the season. {mighty Irish of Notre Dame, mpe announcement, made today by Tryon ‘General Manager {28-14. Miami holds wins OVer yo... york, will fill the vacancy left by Head Coach Boris Diman(Citadel (21-0) and Villanova .,.gg jeave of absence.
~iserve their long unbeaten streak
Army Rated At 10 Points Over Michigan
Proud Oklahoma Believed to Face
Disaster in Texas
NEW YORK, Oct. 13—Army’s precision-drilled cadets were rated
Statement Isn't a 10-point favorite today to pre-
Publicity Gag
against Michigan Saturday but ‘ BY. FRER ow N nite ress Sporis riter
the oddsmakers predicted disaster) NEW YORK, Oct. 13— What is ahead for Oklahoma, proud win- behind Joe DiMaggio’'s statement ner of 23 straight football vic- that he may not return to the tories. New York Yankees in 19517 . ) A The baseball world wondered to- ( oming up for Oklahoma is its'qay while DiMaggio insisted it oo ne ou Sock em feud Wwith/was no “off the cuff” statement, ghty Texas, played on neutral pot a publicity gag and not the ground at Dallas, Tex., and the ope | Texans were favored by
seven yw ; win points.
another $100,000 from the Yankees. . The Longhorns from the Lone DiMaggio said he “just hadn’t Star State, conquerors of Purdue made up my mind” and “probably two weeks ago, rested last week- woundn't until next spring.” end while Oklahoma was clawing from behind to down Texas A. &
M. The Sooner streak almost determining factor. If it's good,
ended right there. . Even with Chuck Ortmann back Joe wil he pack. Otlier Che ne in the Michigan lineup, the Big jump into the television and as 10 co-champs were held no closer field United Press coa¢ hes rat © view on next year,” DiMaggio board. ( § INE said. “I told Dan Topping ( Yankee owner) in July and August that The sharp Cadets, led by I didn’t know if my aches and Quarterback Bobby Rlaik whose pains could take it another year dad does the coaching, feature a Then ‘I felt like a two-vear old host of swift and agile backs during the World Series and I along with a deadly defensive never felt better all season than I line. They haven't heen beaten do now.” in 22 games, although a pair of The great outfielder said he had ties are mixed in the streak. no immediate plans for a salary conference with club officials. He } said he would spend the winter in Wir gl narreetional his San Francisco home after Ban 5 ; : ot downs In completing a series of television ve conference races headline programs being made here. the collegiate football week-end, <The first thought among baseWhich opens tonight with Illinois hall men was that DiMaggio was 2 Sa-pomt fayoiice 0 defeat opening his bid for another » be Le A. at Los Argeles in'g100,000 contract.
the top feature. . Notre j:ame, whipped by Purdue, May Hare {6 Take ( u after 39 straight without defeat. He'd be a sucker to quit,” was opens a new drive at Tulane as he general reaction. a 13-point favorite, Rice was held .. There have been hints from the at 13 over Pittsburgh at Pitts- Yankee front office that DiMaggio burgh, Purdue was held at 20 over will be asked to accept a cut in
thé Miami (Fla.) * Hurricanes, | 1 51. Joe himself would not be
Michigan State was rated .a 27. SW'Prised if the slash were atpoint favorite over William and tempted. He knows that at 36 Mary at East Lansing, Mich. and D¢ 18 nearing the end of his baseTulsa was favored by six over Pll life. Villanova at Tulsa. However, Joe's statement makes
« it clear to the Yankee front office Tickets Available
contract
Health Determining Factor
Eight Intersectionals
Eight major
that he plans “to go out while For. 1U- i u Buckeye Tilt on as an ordinary player drawing Tickets still are available for the his health,
ill on top.” Such plans would chase fears that he might linger Times State Service $50,000 to $60,000 a year. | BLOOMINGTON, Oct, - 13 DiMaggio spoke willingly about Indiana-Ohijo State Big 10 foot-/couraging outlook ball game here tomorrow,
rid
He recalled his dis-
M
Health fo Determine DiMag's Return to Yanks
ning shot in his campaign toe F
4
He said his health would be the |
Joltin' Joe. . . . Is this the end of the trail?
about next year until I know how my health is,” he continued. “I don’t want to start out with great hopes in April and then have to go through my 1950 experi ences all over again.” Last season was DiMaggio's most frustrating although he closed at a .376-six-week pace and finished the season with 32 homsers, 122 runs batted in and a .301 average. His health was as bad in mid-season as in the closing days of the 1949 campaign and he suffered the indignity of being benched for the first time in his career. Manager Casey Stengel's experiment with Joe as a first hase man was another galling and dis appointing experience. So, it could be that it is only a disappointed and hurt man who is speaking in terms of retire~ ment. If so, Joe is a million-to~ one cinch to head for the Yankees' spring camp at the first sign of spring.
meee
Gander May Replace N. Dame's Landry
SOUTH BEND, Oct, 13 (UP) Notre Dame's football team was to leave today by plane for tomorrow’s game at New Orleans with Tulane, it will be the first air travel for a Notre Dame team, Trainer Hugh Burns reported
in July and itpat Fullback Jack Landry, sufIU August when he first mentioned fering from a bruised leg muscle,
Athletic Director Paul (Pooch) the possibility of his retirement may not be able to start the
Harrell announced today. Harrell, in assuring that a Officials. visitors for Dad’s Day would be ‘Frustrating. Season accommodated, said that reserve “Both of my knees were bad,” seat tickets will be on sale at'Joe said. “My whole body ached stadium ticket offices from 11 and then on top of it all I got a a. m. tomorrow until game time. virus cold. I didn't know if I Prior to that time tickets may beicould take it much longer and secured through the university told Topping so. ticket office. “I ean't make up my mind
to Topping and other high Yankee game. He would be replaced by
Del Gander. A special train of 300 students and the Notre Dame band left last night for the game.
College Football
New Biitaln 14, New Dediord 8, v Ohio Northern ZI, m . Tarleton State 28, Cameron, Okla, As rie
Clinton Knifz . . . Purdue.
lw | (18-12). has been granted | The Boilermaker-Hurricane tilt|, DE Tryons — But{shapes up as a passing tizzy. Pur- ,.." where he is an assistant |due’s Sophomore Dale Samuels, | ach, to be with his ill daughter \who out-dueled * Notre Dame's ,¢ , Chicago hospital. The leave Bobby Williams, is up. against .i..4q¢ through Jan. 1. Miami's mighty mite, Jack Hack- “meanwhile, Kanny Smock of ett. : Indianapolis, Tyron backfield Coach Stu Holcomb can stick star has been appointed an as|to the ground in safety. His Pur-/gstant Tryon coach. dues boast such accomplished rhe All-Stars, victors in five gainers as Co-Capt. and Fullback gtrajght games, will play their John Kerestes and Halfback Neil fina] night home game here SunSchmidt. |day at 8 o'clock against the Can-| Irish Menacing ton, Ill, Jets. Remaining Tryon The Irish of Notre Dame, NOW home games will be played Sunout from under a 39-game unde- 4ay afternoons. . feated. streak, thanks to Purdue,| The Jets are coached by Inmen bode trouble for Tulane. Tulane (pog) Blackaby, former Butler| {walked over Louisiana College, University fullback who is the 64-0, last week, but fared badly only Bulldog player in history io] against its only Class A opponent, represent the schogl in the Chi-| Alabama, The Crimson ripped cago All-Star game. . Coach Henry Frnk’s boys, 26-14. Included in the Jets’ playing Notre Dame's defeat last week roster are Corwin Clatt, ex-Notre| ; is having little effect on the box ipDame and Chicago Cardinal office. New Orleans reports 82,000 player; Fullback Charles Fox, will turn out to see Coach Frank pyrdué; John Butkus, Western Leahy's Irish, always popular in state Teachers College and several Dixie. ’ other Illinois secondary grid stars. Notre Dame will be playing - pment
without Back Dave Flood, a Pur- \ward Deferred
{due casualty. Fullback Jack “ : the doubtful list. SPRINGFIELD, Mo. Oct. 13 lanary is oh : (UP)—Preston Ward, 23-year-old _
sities 3e jor Bulle will pe first baseman for the Chicago | meeting for the first time since Cubs: won't have to ge into the 11947 when they tied, 6-6. The ATMY at least until spring. y Ward was 1-A in the draft but
Ba one a rovious Selective Service officials deferred {his induction until after his grad-
meetings. Butler has tied Wabash and uation next spring from the
Tomorrow's Football versity. Ball State has an even ers College. . 5 { season record, falling to Eastern
On TV and Radio Illinois and defeating DePauw High “School Football
TELEVISION | Ball State is hardy enough, but! . a 12:45 p. m.—Michigan-Army, {the Bulldogs have had injury Schedule This Week End
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Solunar Table
A.M Today 30 Tomorrow Sunday Monday : Wednesday Thursday Friday 12:40 Ti tCentral Sianmds
T Additional Pages .34,
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